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Archives: Tomorrow Corporation

1.11.2013

Every month, as part of the regular monthly meetings of the Austin, TX independent game community JUEGOS RANCHEROS, we do a very casual & chatty rundown of the ten or so games from the previous month for the audience, to give people — especially those curious onlookers from outside the indie community itself — a look at what they may have missed. The featured games are both local and global, and both indie and, on occasion, a bit-bigger-budget — what binds them together is simply that they’re all amazing.

In keeping with the tongue-in-tobacco-packed-cheek tone, we call these run-downs A Fistful of Indies, which are presented here on Venus Patrol for your reference, each fully-annotated, -linked, and off-the-cuff blurbed, in addition to their home on the JUEGOS RANCHEROS site.

11.14.2012

Never one to miss a Nintendo launch — his World of Goo being one of the first high-profile downloadable indie releases for the Wii — 2D Boy’s Kyle Gabler along with Henry Hatsworth designer Kyle Gray and their Experimental Gameplay Project cohort Allan Blomquist have just revealed the first gameplay of their Little Inferno, due out this Sunday for PC & Wii U.

And that is actual gameplay: while I’ll save the deeper look for a full writeup in the near future, as previously-hinted at, the bulk of Little Inferno does concern itself with igniting your precious possessions in a fantastically simulated fireplace, to (no surprise, for those that’ve fully experienced the darker tones of Goo) deeply sardonic ends.

But!

If you’re already convinced: you can download Inferno for PC straight from the Tomorrow Corporation boys right now, right over here — which will also net you a Steam key (and eventual Mac & Linux versions) when the game unlocks there on Sunday — which suffice it to say for now that I highly suggest that you do.

9.27.2012

Suddenly actually probably the Wii U launch title I’m looking forward to the most, Nintendo’s latest communique on the system’s lineup through next year included one extra exciting entry: Little Inferno the debut game from Tomorrow Corporation.

Tomorrow Corporation themselves are an all-star team of World of Goo creator Kyle Gabler, Henry Hatsworth designer Kyle Gray and Allan Blomquist, former EA dev and — with Gabler & Gray — the co-founder of Carnegie Mellon’s Experimental Gameplay Project, the student group from which Goo sprang, and the re-launch of which would spawn Adam Saltsman’s Canabalt.

While the Corp have been coy since their inception on what exactly Inferno will entail, it’s safe to assume from the trailer above (and from what little snippets I’ve heard through various grapevines) that the game will concern the burning of various items, perhaps in some Noby Noby Boy-esque passively-multiplayer effort to save the world from a new ice age?